Titan 2000XD

Titan 2000

December 30, 2011

I purchased the 2000 1yr ago and I have had some great days finding
multiple coins with each outing. It really does just as well as my ace 250,
at finding coins at about the same depth. For the price its great and I
feel it does a little better than bounty hunter machines in the same price
range. Keep making them don't give up on the machine.

Overall RatingKevin b from
Utah

31

Titan 2000XD

June 23, 2006

My Grandpa started metal detecting over 35 years ago. I have a couple of
his old machines, one being a Bounty Hunter Outlaw. It has a plethora of
knobs and a meter marked BAD/GOOD in red/green. About all you knew was some
kind of metal was ??down there?? He passed away over 20 years ago, so the
detector is at least that old, and probably more like 25 years old. We have
a picture on the wall of him and his detectors, posed over an iron pot FULL
of gold and silver coins. He traveled the U.S. and detected
everywhere.

So with that, I?m not new to metal detectors, just the ??motion??
detectors. They are different, but it?s real easy to get onto. The old
analog non-motion detectors have a continuous tone, and go:
??oooooeeeEEEeeeoooo?? as you move the coil over metal. Motion types beep
(different tones with different metals) and ID as you move, then freeze the
display until another detection is made. You pinpoint by moving in an X
pattern and noting where the center of the coil is on each beep. The
2000XD?s coil is dead center on a pinpoint.

I received my Titan 2000XD a week ago. It?s well made and accurate. It?s
amazing what 25 years of technology can do with new detectors.

I went out with a buddy, and we waved its coil around an old homestead.
Within minutes we found a very old boot over a foot down just from the
nails in its heel. Not bad! Also found an 1850?s Mason jar lid about 6??
down. I have a few old jars, so I know what vintage the lid is. The 2000XD
ID?ed it as zinc and showed the depth within an inch of where it was
actually found. There?s an old fruit cellar crammed full of dry
tumbleweeds, so on the next trip we?ll be packing a pitchfork to toss them
out with. With any luck, someone?s grandma hid the egg money in the cellar
floor. It?s in a hidden place that I remembered finding 20 years ago, so I
doubt any detector has ever been used there. There?s also a 20 foot deep
cistern?s small opening unseen in the 4 foot tall weeds. I knew it was
there from before, but it might trap some unlucky person who doesn?t know
about it.

The Titan 2000XD is VERY easy to use. Turn it on and start waving the coil.
It?s that simple. The ITD button is great for an instant ??ignore?? on
known bad targets. The notch is a cool feature ? you can select more than
one notch at different metals. e.g. notch out pop tabs, iron, and zinc,
and it will pick up everything else in between. Try THAT with an analog
detector! (The R?s in the product photos of the display show the notch or
discrimination positions)

The display is easy to see even at high noon. The buttons can be operated
with gloves on. The tones are loud enough to be heard without headphones,
and the different tones let you work without watching the display yet know
what?s being picked up. The coil stays locked in place, and the aluminum
coil shaft is locked with a solid snap button setup. No cheesy cinch knob
on the shaft!

At this point, I?m in ??dig all targets?? mode until I can get proficient
with it. The best so far is finding a rusty brad nail at 5?? down. I had to
repeatedly sift through the dug-out soil to find the tiny thing! If there?s
any metal down there, the 2000XD won?t miss it!